
During
World War II, the German military faced a threat worse than the Allies:
typhus. The disease was killing soldiers and weakening the German
forces on the Eastern front as they faced the Soviet Army. They
scrambled to develop a typhus vaccine in hurry. Joachim Mrugowsky, head
of the SS Hygiene Institute, set up a research lab at Buchenwald
concentration camp, thinking it would be safe from Allied bombing.
Dr.
Erwin Ding-Schuler, an ambitious but callow Nazi officer and
Mrugowsky’s deputy, was chosen to lead production, and began assembling
captive scientists with the help of his new clerk, an imprisoned German
intellectual named Eugen Kogon. Among those drafted was a gentle Jewish
biologist named Ludwik Fleck, who was a former assistant of Dr. Weigl
whom Weigl had protected during the Nazi occupation of Lviv.
Thus
began one of the most effective but least-known deceptions of World War
II, one that is wondrously thick with irony: For 16 months, working
under the noses of his clueless Nazi overseers—in particular
Ding-Schuler, whom Fleck described as a “dummkopf”—a Jewish doctor
managed to send fake typhus vaccine to the Nazi soldiers at the front,
even as he provided the real thing to inoculate his fellow condemned
Jews in a concentration camp.
The project started off
on the wrong foot, with Nazi doctors who had no experience in
immunology, overseeing camp inmates who lied about being doctors, using a
translated French pamphlet as a how-to guide, to do an extremely
complex procedure under horrid conditions. That was before Dr. Fleck
came along, and the group finally had someone who knew what he was
doing.
It’s a fascinating story overall, with a Nuremberg climax fit for Hollywood, at Politico magazine.
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